Title: Arterial Blood Gas Interpretation
1Arterial Blood Gas Interpretation
Lawrence Martin, MD, FACP, FCCP Associate
Professor of MedicineCase Western Reserve
University School of Medicine, Clevelandlarry.mar
tin_at_adelphia.net
- Information in this slide presentation is adapted
from All You Really Need to Know to Interpret
Arterial Blood Gases (2nd ed.), by Lawrence
Martin, MD, Lippincott, Williams, Wilkins
2Normal Arterial Blood Gas Values
- pH 7.35 - 7.45
- PaCO2 35 - 45 mm Hg
- PaO2 70 - 100 mm Hg
- SaO2 93 - 98
- HCO3 22 - 26 mEq/L
- MetHb lt 2.0
- COHb lt 3.0
- Base excess -2.0 to 2.0 mEq/L
- CaO2 16 - 22 ml O2/dl
- At sea level, breathing ambient air
- Age-dependent
3The Key to Blood Gas InterpretationFour
Equations, Three Physiologic Processes
- Equation Physiologic Process
- 1) PaCO2 equation Alveolar ventilation
- 2) Alveolar gas equation Oxygenation
- 3) Oxygen content equation Oxygenation
- 4) Henderson-Hasselbalch equation Acid-base
balance - These four equations, crucial to understanding
and interpreting arterial blood gas data, will
provide the structure for this slide presentation.
4PaCO2 Equation PaCO2 reflects ratio of
metabolic CO2 production to alveolar ventilation
- VCO2 x 0.863 VCO2 CO2 production
- PaCO2 ------------------- VA VE
VD - VA VE minute (total) ventilation ( resp.
rate x tidal volume) - VD dead space ventilation ( resp. rate x
dead space volume - 0.863 converts VCO2 and VA units to mm Hg
- Condition State of
- PaCO2 in blood alveolar ventilation
- gt 45 mm Hg Hypercapnia Hypoventilation
- 35 - 45 mm Hg Eucapnia Normal ventilation
- lt 35 mm Hg Hypocapnia Hyperventilation
5Hypercapnia
- VCO2 x 0.863
- PaCO2 ------------------
- VA VA VE VD
-
- Hypercapnia (elevated PaCO2) is a serious
respiratory problem. The PaCO2 equation shows
that the only physiologic reason for elevated
PaCO2 is inadequate alveolar ventilation (VA) for
the amount of the bodys CO2 production (VCO2).
Since alveolar ventilation (VA) equals total or
minute ventilation (VE) minus dead space
ventilation (VD), hypercapnia can arise from
insufficient VE, increased VD, or a combination
of both.
6Hypercapnia (cont)
- VCO2 x 0.863
- PaCO2 ------------------
- VA VA VE VD
- Examples of inadequate VE leading to decreased VA
and increased PaCO2 sedative drug overdose
respiratory muscle paralysis central
hypoventilation - Examples of increased VD leading to decreased VA
and increased PaCO2 chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease severe restrictive lung
disease (with shallow, rapid breathing)
7Clinical Assessment of Hypercapnia is Unreliable
- The PaCO2 equation shows why PaCO2 cannot
reliably be assessed clinically. Since you never
know the patient's VCO2 or VA, you cannot
determine the VCO2/VA, which is what PaCO2
provides. (Even if VE is measured respiratory
rate x tidal volume, you cannot determine the
amount of air going to dead space, i.e., the dead
space ventilation.) - There is no predictable correlation between PaCO2
and the clinical picture. In a patient with
possible respiratory disease, respiratory rate,
depth, and effort cannot be reliably used to
predict even a directional change in PaCO2. A
patient in respiratory distress can have a high,
normal, or low PaCO2. A patient without
respiratory distress can have a high, normal, or
low PaCO2.
8Dangers of Hypercapnia
- Besides indicating a serious derangement in the
respiratory system, elevated PaCO2 poses a threat
for three reasons - 1) An elevated PaCO2 will lower the PAO2 (see
Alveolar gas equation), and as a result will
lower the PaO2. - 2) An elevated PaCO2 will lower the pH (see
Henderson-Hasselbalch equation). - 3) The higher the baseline PaCO2, the greater
it will rise for a given fall in alveolar
ventilation, e.g., a 1 L/min decrease in VA will
raise PaCO2 a greater amount when the baseline
PaCO2 is 50 mm Hg than when it is 40 mm Hg.
(See next slide)
9PCO2 vs. Alveolar Ventilation
- The relationship is shown for metabolic carbon
dioxide production rates of 200 ml/min and 300
ml/min (curved lines). A fixed decrease in
alveolar ventilation (x-axis) in the hypercapnic
patient will result in a greater rise in PaCO2
(y-axis) than the same VA change when PaCO2 is
low or normal. (This situation is analogous to
the progressively steeper rise in BUN as
glomerular filtration rate declines.)This graph
also shows that if alveolar ventilation is fixed,
an increase in carbon dioxide production will
result in an increase in PaCO2.
10PaCO2 and Alveolar Ventilation Test Your
Understanding
1. What is the PaCO2 of a patient with
respiratory rate 24/min, tidal volume 300 ml,
dead space volume 150 ml, CO2 production 300
ml/min? The patient shows some evidence of
respiratory distress. 2. What is the PaCO2 of a
patient with respiratory rate 10/min, tidal
volume 600 ml, dead space volume 150 ml, CO2
production 200 ml/min? The patient shows some
evidence of respiratory distress.
11PaCO2 and Alveolar Ventilation Test Your
Understanding - Answers
1. First, you must calculate the alveolar
ventilation. Since minute ventilation is 24 x
300 or 7.2 L/min, and dead space ventilation is
24 x 150 or 3.6 L/min, alveolar ventilation is
3.6 L/min. Then 300 ml/min x .863
PaCO2 -----------------------
3.6 L/min PaCO2 71.9 mm Hg 2. VA VE
- VD 10(600) - 10(150) 6 - 1.5 4.5
L/min 200 ml/min x .863 PaCO2
---------------------- 38.4 mm Hg
4.5 L/min
12PaCO2 and Alveolar Ventilation Test Your
Understanding
3. A man with severe chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease exercises on a treadmill at 3
miles/hr. His rate of CO2 production increases
by 50 but he is unable to augment alveolar
ventilation. If his resting PaCO2 is 40 mm Hg
and resting VCO2 is 200 ml/min, what will be his
exercise PaCO2?
13PaCO2 and Alveolar Ventilation Test Your
Understanding - Answer
3. Exercise increases metabolic CO2 production.
People with a normal respiratory system are
always able to augment alveolar ventilation to
meet or exceed the amount of VA necessary to
excrete any increase in CO2 production. As in
this example, patients with severe COPD or other
forms of chronic lung disease may not be able to
increase their alveolar ventilation, resulting in
an increase in PaCO2. This patients resting
alveolar ventilation is 200 ml/min x
.863 ----------------------- 4.32
L/min 40 mm Hg Since CO2 production
increased by 50 and alveolar ventilation not at
all, his exercise PaCO2 is 300 ml/min x
.863 -------------------------- 59.9 mm
Hg 4.32 L/min
14Alveolar Gas Equation
PAO2 PIO2 - 1.2 (PaCO2) Where PAO2 is the
average alveolar PO2, and PIO2 is the partial
pressure of inspired oxygen in the trachea PIO2
FIO2 (PB 47 mm Hg) FIO2 is fraction of
inspired oxygen and PB is the barometric
pressure. 47 mm Hg is the water vapor pressure
at normal body temperature. Note This
is the abbreviated version of the AG equation,
suitable for most clinical purposes. In the
longer version, the multiplication factor 1.2
declines with increasing FIO2, reaching zero when
100 oxygen is inhaled. In these exercises 1.2
is dropped when FIO2 is above 60.
15Alveolar Gas Equation
- PAO2 PIO2 - 1.2 (PaCO2)where PIO2 FIO2 (PB
47 mm Hg) - Except in a temporary unsteady state, alveolar
PO2 (PAO2) is always higher than arterial PO2
(PaO2). As a result, whenever PAO2 decreases,
PaO2 also decreases. Thus, from the AG equation - If FIO2 and PB are constant, then as PaCO2
increases both PAO2 and PaO2 will decrease
(hypercapnia causes hypoxemia). - If FIO2 decreases and PB and PaCO2 are constant,
both PAO2 and PaO2 will decrease (suffocation
causes hypoxemia). - If PB decreases (e.g., with altitude), and PaCO2
and FIO2 are constant, both PAO2 and PaO2 will
decrease (mountain climbing leads to hypoxemia).
16Alveolar Gas Equation Test Your Understanding
- What is the PAO2 at sea level in the following
circumstances? (Barometric pressure 760 mm Hg) - a) FIO2 1.00, PaCO2 30 mm Hg
- b) FIO2 .21, PaCO2 50 mm Hg
- c) FIO2 .40, PaCO2 30 mm Hg
- What is the PAO2 on the summit of Mt. Everest in
the following circumstances? (Barometric
pressure 253 mm Hg) - a) FIO2 .21, PaCO2 40 mm Hg
- b) FIO2 1.00, PaCO2 40 mm Hg
- c) FIO2 .21, PaCO2 10 mm Hg
17Alveolar Gas Equation Test Your Understanding
- Answers
- To calculate PAO2 the PaCO2 must be subtracted
from the PIO2. Again, the barometric pressure is
760 mm Hg since the values are obtained at sea
level. In part a, the PaCO2 of 30 mm Hg is not
multiplied by 1.2 since the FIO2 is 1.00. In
parts b and c, PaCO2 is multiplied by the factor
1.2. - a) PAO2 1.00 (713) - 30 683 mm Hg
- b) PAO2 .21 (713) - 1.2 (50) 90 mm Hg
- c) PAO2 .40 (713) - 1.2 (30) 249 mm Hg
- The PAO2 on the summit of Mt. Everest is
calculated just as at sea level, using the
barometric pressure of 253 mm Hg. - a) PAO2 .21 (253 - 47) - 1.2 (40) - 5 mm
Hg - b) PAO2 1.00 (253 - 47) - 40 166 mm Hg
- c) PAO2 .21 (253 - 47) - 1.2 (10) 31 mm Hg
18P(A-a)O2
- P(A-a)O2 is the alveolar-arterial difference in
partial pressure of oxygen. It is commonly
called the A-a gradient, though it does not
actually result from an O2 pressure gradient in
the lungs. Instead, it results from
gravity-related blood flow changes within the
lungs (normal ventilation-perfusion imbalance). - PAO2 is always calculated based on FIO2, PaCO2,
and barometric pressure. - PaO2 is always measured on an arterial blood
sample in a blood gas machine. -
- Normal P(A-a)O2 ranges from _at_ 5 to 25 mm Hg
breathing room air (it increases with age). A
higher than normal P(A-a)O2 means the lungs are
not transferring oxygen properly from alveoli
into the pulmonary capillaries. Except for right
to left cardiac shunts, an elevated P(A-a)O2
signifies some sort of problem within the lungs.
19Physiologic Causes of Low PaO2
- NON-RESPIRATORY P(A-a)O2
- Cardiac right-to-left shunt Increased
- Decreased PIO2 NormalLow mixed venous
oxygen content Increased - RESPIRATORY P(A-a)O2
- Pulmonary right-to-left shunt
IncreasedVentilation-perfusion imbalance
IncreasedDiffusion barrier
IncreasedHypoventilation (increased PaCO2)
Normal - Unlikely to be clinically significant unless
there is right-to-left shunting or
ventilation-perfusion imbalance
20Ventilation-perfusion Imbalance
- A normal amount of ventilation-perfusion (V-Q)
imbalance accounts for the normal P(A-a)O2. - By far the most common cause of low PaO2 is an
abnormal degree of ventilation-perfusion
imbalance within the hundreds of millions of
alveolar-capillary units. Virtually all lung
disease lowers PaO2 via V-Q imbalance, e.g.,
asthma, pneumonia, atelectasis, pulmonary edema,
COPD. - Diffusion barrier is seldom a major cause of low
PaO2 (it can lead to a low PaO2 during exercise).
21P(A-a)O2 Test Your Understanding
3. For each of the following scenarios,
calculate the P(A-a)O2 using the abbreviated
alveolar gas equation assume PB 760 mm Hg.
Which of these patients is most likely to have
lung disease? Do any of the values represent a
measurement or recording error? a) A
35-year-old man with PaCO2 50 mm Hg, PaO2 150 mm
Hg, FIO2 .40. b) A 44-year-old woman with PaCO2
75 mm Hg, PaO2 95 mm Hg, FIO2 0.28. c) A young,
anxious man with PaO2 120 mm Hg, PaCO2 15 mm Hg,
FIO2 0.21. d) A woman in the intensive care
unit with PaO2 350 mm Hg, PaCO2 40 mm Hg, FIO2
0.80. e) A man with PaO2 80 mm Hg, PaCO2 72 mm
Hg, FIO2 0.21.
22P(A-a)O2 Test Your Understanding - Answers to 3
a) PAO2 .40 (760 - 47) - 1.2 (50) 225 mm
Hg P(A-a)O2 225 - 150 75 mm Hg The
P(A-a)O22 is elevated but actually within the
expected range for supplemental oxygen at 40, so
the patient may or may not have a defect in gas
exchange. b) PAO2 .28 (713) - 1.2 (75) 200
- 90 110 mm Hg P(A-a)O2 110 - 95 15 mm
Hg Despite severe hypoventilation, there is no
evidence here for lung disease. Hypercapnia is
most likely a result of disease elsewhere in the
respiratory system, either the central nervous
system or chest bellows. c) PAO2 .21 (713) -
1.2 (15) 150 - 18 132 mm Hg P(A-a)O2 132 -
120 12 mm Hg Hyperventilation can easily raise
PaO2 above 100 mm Hg when the lungs are normal,
as in this case. (continued)
23P(A-a)O2 Test Your Understanding - Answers to
3 (cont)
- PAO2 .80 (713) - 40 530 mm Hg (Note that the
factor 1.2 is dropped since FIO2 is above 60) - P(A-a)O2 530 - 350 180 mm Hg
- P(A-a)O2 is increased. Despite a very high
PaO2, the lungs are not transferring oxygen
normally. - e) PAO2 .21 (713) - 1.2 (72) 150 - 86 64
mm Hg P(A-a)O2 64 - 80 -16 mm Hg - A negative P(A-a)O2 is incompatible with life
(unless it is a transient unsteady state, such as
sudden fall in FIO2 -- not the case here). In
this example, negative P(A-a)O2 can be explained
by any of the following incorrect FIO2,
incorrect blood gas measurement, or a reporting
or transcription error.
24SaO2 and Oxygen Content
- Tissues need a requisite amount of oxygen
molecules for metabolism. Neither the PaO2 nor
the SaO2 tells how much oxygen is in the blood.
How much is provided by the oxygen content, CaO2
(units ml O2/dl). CaO2 is calculated asCaO2
quantity O2 bound quantity O2
dissolved to hemoglobin in
plasmaCaO2 (Hb x 1.34 x SaO2) (.003
x PaO2) - Hb hemoglobin in gm 1.34 ml O2 that can be
bound to each gm of Hb SaO2 is percent
saturation of hemoglobin with oxygen .003 is
solubility coefficient of oxygen in plasma .003
ml dissolved O2/mm Hg PO2.
25Oxygen Dissociation Curve SaO2 vs. PaO2
Also shown are CaO2 vs. PaO2 for two different
hemoglobin contents 15 gm and 10 gm. CaO2
units are ml O2/dl. P50 is the PaO2 at which
SaO2 is 50. Point X is discussed on later
slide.
26SaO2 Is it Calculated or Measured?
- You always need to know this when confronted with
blood gas data. - SaO2 is measured in a co-oximeter. The
traditional blood gas machine measures only pH,
PaCO2, and PaO2,, whereas the co-oximeter
measures SaO2, carboxyhemoglobin, methemoglobin,
and hemoglobin content. Newer blood gas
consoles incorporate a co-oximeter, and so offer
the latter group of measurements as well as pH,
PaCO2, and PaO2. - You should always make sure the SaO2 is measured,
not calculated. If SaO2 is calculated from PaO2
and the O2-dissociation curve, it provides no new
information and could be inaccurate - especially
in states of CO intoxication or excess
methemoglobin. CO and metHb do not affect PaO2,
but do lower the SaO2.
27Carbon Monoxide An Important Cause of Hypoxemia
- Normal percentage of COHb in the blood is 1 - 2,
from metabolism and small amount of ambient CO
(higher in traffic-congested areas). - CO is colorless, odorless gas, a product of
combustion all smokers have excess CO in their
blood, typically 5 -10. - CO binds 200x more avidly to hemoglobin than O2,
effectively displacing O2 from the heme binding
sites. CO is a major cause of poisoning deaths
world-wide. - CO has a double-whammy effect on oxygenation
1) decreases SaO2 by the percentage of COHb
present, and 2) shifts the O2-dissociation curve
to the left, retarding unloading of oxygen to the
tissues. - CO does not affect PaO2, only SaO2. To detect CO
poisoning, SaO2 and/or COHb must be measured
(requires co-oximeter). In the presence of
excess CO, SaO2 (when measured) will be lower
than expected from the PaO2.
28CO Does Not Affect PaO2 Be Aware!
- Review the O2 dissociation curve shown on a
previous slide. X represents the 2nd set of
blood gases for a patient who presented to the ER
with headache and dyspnea. - His first blood gases showed PaO2 80 mm Hg, PaCO2
38 mm Hg, pH 7.43. SaO2 on this first set was
calculated from the O2-dissociation curve as 97,
and oxygenation was judged normal. - He was sent out from the ER and returned a few
hours later with mental confusion this time both
SaO2 and COHb were measured (SaO2 shown by X)
PaO2 79 mm Hg, PaCO2 31 mm Hg, pH 7.36, SaO2 53,
carboxyhemoglobin 46. -
- CO poisoning was missed on the first set of blood
gases because SaO2 was not measured!
29Causes of Hypoxia A General Classification
- 1. Hypoxemia ( low PaO2 and/or low CaO2)
- a. reduced PaO2 usually from lung disease
(most common physiologic mechanism V-Q
imbalance) - b. reduced SaO2 most commonly from reduced
PaO2 other causes include carbon monoxide
poisoning, methemoglobinemia, or rightward shift
of the O2-dissociation curve - c. reduced hemoglobin content anemia
- 2. Reduced oxygen delivery to the tissues
- a. reduced cardiac output shock, congestive
heart failure - b. left-to-right systemic shunt (as may be seen
in septic shock) - 3. Decreased tissue oxygen uptake
- a. mitochondrial poisoning (e.g., cyanide
poisoning) - b. left-shifted hemoglobin dissociation curve
(e.g., from acute alkalosis, excess CO, or
abnormal hemoglobin structure)
30How much oxygen is in the blood, and is it
adequate for the patient? PaO2 vs. SaO2 vs. CaO2
- The answer must be based on some oxygen value,
but which one? Blood gases give us three
different oxygen values PaO2, SaO2, and CaO2
(oxygen content). - Of these three values, PaO2, or oxygen pressure,
is the least helpful to answer the question about
oxygen adequacy in the blood. The other two
values - SaO2 and CaO2 - are more useful for this
purpose.
31How much oxygen is in the blood?PaO2 vs. SaO2
vs. CaO2
- OXYGEN PRESSURE PaO2
- Since PaO2 reflects only free oxygen molecules
dissolved in plasma and not those bound to
hemoglobin, PaO2 cannot tell us how much oxygen
is in the blood for that you need to know how
much oxygen is also bound to hemoglobin,
information given by the SaO2 and hemoglobin
content. - OXYGEN SATURATION SaO2
- The percentage of all the available heme binding
sites saturated with oxygen is the hemoglobin
oxygen saturation (in arterial blood, the SaO2).
Note that SaO2 alone doesnt reveal how much
oxygen is in the blood for that we also need to
know the hemoglobin content. - OXYGEN CONTENT CaO2
- Tissues need a requisite amount of O2 molecules
for metabolism. Neither the PaO2 nor the SaO2
provide information on the number of oxygen
molecules, i.e., how much oxygen is in the blood.
(Neither PaO2 nor SaO2 have units that denote
any quantity.) Only CaO2 (units ml O2/dl) tells
us how much oxygen is in the blood this is
because CaO2 is the only value that incorporates
the hemoglobin content. Oxygen content can be
measured directly or calculated by the oxygen
content equation - CaO2 (Hb x 1.34 x SaO2) (.003 x PaO2)
32SaO2 and CaO2 Test Your Understanding
Below are blood gas results from four pairs of
patients. For each letter pair, state which
patient, (1) or (2), is more hypoxemic. Units
for hemoglobin content (Hb) are gm and for PaO2
mm Hg. a) (1) Hb 15, PaO2 100, pH 7.40, COHb
20 (2) Hb 12, PaO2 100, pH 7.40, COHb
0 b) (1) Hb 15, PaO2 90, pH 7.20, COHb
5 (2) Hb 15, PaO2 50, pH 7.40, COHb
0 c) (1) Hb 5, PaO2 60, pH 7.40, COHb 0 (2) Hb
15, PaO2 100, pH 7.40, COHb 20 d) (1) Hb 10,
PaO2 60, pH 7.30, COHb 10 (2) Hb 15, PaO2 100,
pH 7.40, COHb 15
33SaO2 and CaO2 Test Your Understanding - Answers
a) (1) CaO2 .78 x 15 x 1.34 15.7 ml
O2/dl (2) CaO2 .98 x 12 x 1.34 15.8 ml
O2/dl The oxygen contents are almost identical,
and therefore neither patient is more hypoxemic.
However, patient (1), with 20 CO, is more
hypoxic than patient (2) because of the
left-shift of the O2-dissociation curve caused by
the excess CO. b) (1) CaO2 .87 x 15 x 1.34
17.5 ml O2/dl (2) CaO2 .85 x 15 x 1.34 17.1
ml O2/dl A PaO2 of 90 mm Hg with pH of 7.20
gives an SaO2 of _at_ 92 subtracting 5 COHb from
this value gives a true SaO2 of 87, used in the
CaO2 calculation of patient (1). A PaO2 of 50 mm
Hg with normal pH gives an SaO2 of 85. Thus
patient (2) is slightly more hypoxemic. c) (1)
CaO2 .90 x 5 x .1.34 6.0 ml O2/dl (2) CaO2
.78 x 15 x 1.34 15.7 ml O2/dl Patient (1) is
more hypoxemic, because of severe anemia. d) (1)
CaO2 .87 x 10 x .1.34 11.7 ml O2/dl (2)
CaO2 .83 x 15 x 1.34 16.7 ml O2/dl Patient
(1) is more hypoxemic.
34Acid-base Balance Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation
- HCO3-
- pH pK log ----------------
- .03 PaCO2
- For teaching purposes, the H-H equation can be
shortened to its basic relationships - HCO3-
- pH ---------
- PaCO2
35pH is inversely related to H a pH change of
1.00 represents a 10-fold change in H
- pH H in nanomoles/L
-
- 7.00 100
- 7.10 80
- 7.30 50
- 7.40 40
- 7.52 30
- 7.70 20
- 8.00 10
36Acid-base Terminology
- Acidemia blood pH lt 7.35
- Acidosis a primary physiologic process that,
occurring alone, tends to cause acidemia.
Examples metabolic acidosis from decreased
perfusion (lactic acidosis) respiratory acidosis
from hypoventilation. If the patient also has an
alkalosis at the same time, the resulting blood
pH may be low, normal, or high. - Alkalemia blood pH gt 7.45
- Alkalosis a primary physiologic process that,
occurring alone, tends to cause alkalemia.
Examples metabolic alkalosis from excessive
diuretic therapy respiratory alkalosis from
acute hyperventilation. If the patient also has
an acidosis at the same time, the resulting blood
pH may be high, normal, or low.
37Acid-base Terminology (cont.)
- Primary acid-base disorder One of the four
acid-base disturbances that is manifested by an
initial change in HCO3- or PaCO2. They are
metabolic acidosis (MAc), metabolic alkalosis
(MAlk), respiratory acidosis (RAc), and
respiratory alkalosis (RAlk). If HCO3- changes
first, the disorder is either MAc (reduced HCO3-
and acidemia) or MAlk (elevated HCO3- and
alkalemia). If PaCO2 changes first, the problem
is either RAlk (reduced PaCO2 and alkalemia) or
RAc (elevated PaCO2 and acidemia). - Compensation The change in HCO3- or PaCO2 that
results from the primary event. Compensatory
changes are not classified by the terms used for
the four primary acid-base disturbances. For
example, a patient who hyperventilates (lowers
PaCO2) solely as compensation for MAc does not
have a RAlk, the latter being a primary disorder
that, alone, would lead to alkalemia. In simple,
uncomplicated MAc the patient will never develop
alkalemia.
38Primary Acid-base DisordersRespiratory Alkalosis
- Respiratory alkalosis - A primary disorder where
the first change is a lowering of PaCO2,
resulting in an elevated pH. Compensation
(bringing the pH back down toward normal) is a
secondary lowering of bicarbonate (HCO3) by the
kidneys this reduction in HCO3- is not metabolic
acidosis, since it is not a primary process. - Primary Event Compensatory Event
- HCO3- ?HCO3-
- ? pH -------
? pH -------- - ? PaCO2 ? PaCO2
39Primary Acid-base DisordersRespiratory Acidosis
- Respiratory acidosis - A primary disorder where
the first change is an elevation of PaCO2,
resulting in decreased pH. Compensation
(bringing pH back up toward normal) is a
secondary retention of bicarbonate by the
kidneys this elevation of HCO3- is not metabolic
alkalosis since it is not a primary process. - Primary Event Compensatory Event
- HCO3- ? HCO3-
- ? pH --------- ? pH
--------- - ?PaCO2 ? PaCO2
40Primary Acid-base Disorders Metabolic Acidosis
- Metabolic acidosis - A primary acid-base disorder
where the first change is a lowering of HCO3-,
resulting in decreased pH. Compensation
(bringing pH back up toward normal) is a
secondary hyperventilation this lowering of
PaCO2 is not respiratory alkalosis since it is
not a primary process. - Primary Event Compensatory Event
- ? HCO3- ?HCO3-
- ? pH ------------
? pH ------------ - PaCO2 ? PaCO2
41Primary Acid-base Disorders Metabolic Alkalosis
- Metabolic alkalosis - A primary acid-base
disorder where the first change is an elevation
of HCO3-, resulting in increased pH.
Compensation is a secondary hypoventilation
(increased PaCO2), which is not respiratory
acidosis since it is not a primary process.
Compensation for metabolic alkalosis (attempting
to bring pH back down toward normal) is less
predictable than for the other three acid-base
disorders. - Primary Event Compensatory
Event - ? HCO3- ?HCO3-
- ? pH ------------
? pH --------- - PaCO2 ?PaCO2
42Anion Gap
- Metabolic acidosis is conveniently divided into
elevated and normal anion gap (AG) acidosis. AG
is calculated as - AG Na - (Cl- CO2)
- Note CO2 in this equation is the total CO2
measured in the chemistry lab as part of routine
serum electrolytes, and consists mostly of
bicarbonate. Normal AG is typically 12 4
mEq/L. If AG is calculated using K, the normal
AG is 16 4 mEq/L. Normal values for AG may
vary among labs, so one should always refer to
local normal values before making clinical
decisions based on the AG.
43Metabolic Acid-base Disorders Some Clinical
Causes
- METABOLIC ACIDOSIS ?HCO3- ? pH
- - Increased anion gap
- lactic acidosis ketoacidosis drug poisonings
(e.g., aspirin, ethylene glycol, methanol) - - Normal anion gap
- diarrhea some kidney problems (e.g., renal
tubular acidosis, interstitial nephritis) - METABOLIC ALKALOSIS ? HCO3- ? pH
- Chloride responsive (responds to NaCl or KCl
therapy) contraction alkalosis, diuretics,
corticosteroids, gastric suctioning, vomiting - Chloride resistant any hyperaldosterone state
(e.g., Cushings syndrome, Bartters syndrome,
severe K depletion)
44Respiratory Acid-base DisordersSome Clinical
Causes
- RESPIRATORY ACIDOSIS ?PaCO2 ? pH
- Central nervous system depression (e.g., drug
overdose) - Chest bellows dysfunction (e.g., Guillain-Barré
syndrome, myasthenia gravis) - Disease of lungs and/or upper airway (e.g.,
chronic obstructive lung disease, severe asthma
attack, severe pulmonary edema) - RESPIRATORY ALKALOSIS ?PaCO2 ? pH
- Hypoxemia (includes altitude)
- Anxiety
- Sepsis
- Any acute pulmonary insult (e.g., pneumonia,
mild asthma attack, early pulmonary edema,
pulmonary embolism)
45Mixed Acid-base Disorders are Common
- In chronically ill respiratory patients, mixed
disorders are probably more common than single
disorders, e.g., RAc MAlk, RAc Mac, Ralk
MAlk. - In renal failure (and other conditions) combined
MAlk MAc is also encountered. - Always be on the lookout for mixed acid-base
disorders. They can be missed!
46Tips to Diagnosing Mixed Acid-base Disorders
- TIP 1. Do not interpret any blood gas data for
acid-base diagnosis without closely examining the
serum electrolytes Na, K, Cl-, and CO2. - A serum CO2 out of the normal range always
represents some type of acid-base disorder
(barring lab or transcription error). - High-serum CO2 indicates metabolic alkalosis /or
bicarbonate retention as compensation for
respiratory acidosis. - Low-serum CO2 indicates metabolic acidosis /or
bicarbonate excretion as compensation for
respiratory alkalosis. - Note that serum CO2 may be normal in the presence
of two or more acid-base disorders.
47Tips to Diagnosing Mixed Acid-base Disorders
(cont.)
- TIP 2. Single acid-base disorders do not lead to
normal blood pH. Although pH can end up in the
normal range (7.35 - 7.45) with a single mild
acid-base disorder, a truly normal pH with
distinctly abnormal HCO3- and PaCO2 invariably
suggests two or more primary disorders. -
- Example pH 7.40, PaCO2 20 mm Hg, HCO3- 12 mEq/L
in a patient with sepsis. Normal pH results from
two co-existing and unstable acid-base disorders
- acute respiratory alkalosis and metabolic
acidosis.
48Tips to Diagnosing Mixed Acid-base Disorders
(cont)
- TIP 3. Simplified rules predict the pH and HCO3-
for a given change in PaCO2. If the pH or HCO3-
is higher or lower than expected for the change
in PaCO2, the patient probably has a metabolic
acid-base disorder as well. - The next slide shows expected changes in pH and
HCO3- (in mEq/L) for a 10-mm Hg change in PaCO2
resulting from either primary hypoventilation
(respiratory acidosis) or primary
hyperventilation (respiratory alkalosis).
49Expected changes in pH and HCO3- for a 10-mm Hg
change in PaCO2 resulting from either primary
hypoventilation (respiratory acidosis) or primary
hyperventilation (respiratory alkalosis)
- ACUTE CHRONIC
- Resp Acidosis
-
- pH ? by 0.07 pH ? by 0.03
- HCO3- ? by 1 HCO3- ? by 3 - 4
- Resp Alkalosis
-
- pH ? by 0.08 pH ? by 0.03
- HCO3- ? by 2 HCO3- ? by 5
- Units for HCO3- are mEq/L
50Predicted changes in HCO3- for a directional
change in PaCO2 can help uncover mixed acid-base
disorders.
- A normal or slightly low HCO3- in the presence of
hypercapnia suggests a concomitant metabolic
acidosis, e.g., pH 7.27, PaCO2 50 mm Hg, HCO3- 22
mEq/L. Based on the rule for increase in HCO3-
with hypercapnia, it should be at least 25 mEq/L
in this example that it is only 22 mEq/L
suggests a concomitant metabolic acidosis. - b) A normal or slightly elevated HCO3- in the
presence of hypocapnia suggests a concomitant
metabolic alkalosis, e.g., pH 7.56, PaCO2 30 mm
Hg, HCO3- 26 mEq/L. Based on the rule for
decrease in HCO3- with hypocapnia, it should be
at least 23 mEq/L in this example that it is 26
mEq/L suggests a concomitant metabolic alkalosis.
51Tips to Diagnosing Mixed Acid-base Disorders
(cont.)
- TIP 4. In maximally-compensated metabolic
acidosis, the numerical value of PaCO2 should be
the same (or close to) as the last two digits of
arterial pH. This observation reflects the
formula for expected respiratory compensation in
metabolic acidosis - Expected PaCO2 1.5 x serum CO2 (8 2)
- In contrast, compensation for metabolic alkalosis
(by increase in PaCO2) is highly variable, and in
some cases there may be no or minimal
compensation.
52Acid-base Disorders Test Your Understanding
1. A patients arterial blood gas shows pH of
7.14, PaCO2 of 70 mm Hg, and HCO3- of 23 mEq/L.
How would you describe the likely acid-base
disorder(s)? 2. A 45-year-old man comes to the
hospital complaining of dyspnea for three days.
Arterial blood gas reveals pH 7.35, PaCO2 60 mm
Hg, PaO2 57 mm Hg, HCO3- 31 mEq/L. How would you
characterize his acid-base status?
53Acid-base Disorders Test Your Understanding -
Answers
1. Acute elevation of PaCO2 leads to reduced pH,
i.e., an acute respiratory acidosis. However, is
the problem only acute respiratory acidosis or is
there some additional process? For every 10-mm
Hg rise in PaCO2 (before any renal compensation),
pH falls about 0.07 units. Because this
patient's pH is down 0.26, or 0.05 more than
expected for a 30-mm Hg increase in PaCO2, there
must be an additional metabolic problem. Also
note that with acute CO2 retention of this
degree, the HCO3- should be elevated 3 mEq/L.
Thus a low-normal HCO3- with increased PaCO2 is
another way to uncover an additional metabolic
disorder. Decreased perfusion leading to mild
lactic acidosis would explain the metabolic
component. 2. PaCO2 and HCO3- are elevated,
but HCO3- is elevated more than would be expected
from acute respiratory acidosis. Since the
patient has been dyspneic for several days it is
fair to assume a chronic acid-base disorder.
Most likely this patient has a chronic or
partially compensated respiratory acidosis.
Without electrolyte data and more history, you
cannot diagnose an accompanying metabolic
disorder.
54Acid-base Disorders Test Your Understanding
3. State whether each of the following
statements is true or false. a) Metabolic
acidosis is always present when the measured
serum CO2 changes acutely from 24 to 21
mEq/L. b) In acute respiratory acidosis,
bicarbonate initially rises because of the
reaction of CO2 with water and the resultant
formation of H2CO3. c) If pH and PaCO2 are
both above normal, the calculated bicarbonate
must also be above normal. d) An abnormal
serum CO2 value always indicates an acid-base
disorder of some type. e) The compensation for
chronic elevation of PaCO2 is renal excretion of
bicarbonate. f) A normal pH with abnormal
HCO3- or PaCO2 suggests the presence of two or
more acid- base disorders. g) A normal serum
CO2 value indicates there is no acid-base
disorder. h) Normal arterial blood gas values
rule out the presence of an acid-base disorder.
55Acid-base Disorders Test Your Understanding -
Answers
- 3. a) false
- b) true
- c) true
- d) true
- e) false
- f) true
- g) false
56Summary Clinical and Laboratory Approach to
Acid-base Diagnosis
- Determine existence of acid-base disorder from
arterial blood gas and/or serum electrolyte
measurements. Check serum CO2 if abnormal,
there is an acid-base disorder. If the anion gap
is significantly increased, there is a metabolic
acidosis. - Examine pH, PaCO2, and HCO3- for the obvious
primary acid-base disorder and for deviations
that indicate mixed acid-base disorders (TIPS 2
through 4).
57Summary Clinical and Laboratory Approach to
Acid-base Diagnosis (cont.)
- Use a full clinical assessment (history, physical
exam, other lab data including previous arterial
blood gases and serum electrolytes) to explain
each acid-base disorder. Remember that
co-existing clinical conditions may lead to
opposing acid-base disorders, so that pH can be
high when there is an obvious acidosis or low
when there is an obvious alkalosis. - Treat the underlying clinical condition(s) this
will usually suffice to correct most acid-base
disorders. If there is concern that acidemia or
alkalemia is life-threatening, aim toward
correcting pH into the range of 7.30 - 7.52 (H
50-30 nM/L). - Clinical judgment should always apply
58Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 1. A 55-year-old man is evaluated in the
pulmonary lab for shortness of breath. His
regular medications include a diuretic for
hypertension and one aspirin a day. He smokes a
pack of cigarettes a day. FIO2 .21 HCO3- 30
mEq/L pH 7.53 COHb 7.8 PaCO2 37 mm
Hg Hb 14 gm PaO2 62 mm Hg CaO2 16.5 ml
O2/dl SaO2 87 How would you characterize
his state of oxygenation, ventilation, and
acid-base balance?
59Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 1 - Discussion OXYGENATION The PaO2 and
SaO2 are both reduced on room air. Since
P(A-a)O2 is elevated (approximately 43 mm Hg),
the low PaO2 can be attributed to V-Q imbalance,
i.e., a pulmonary problem. SaO2 is reduced, in
part from the low PaO2 but mainly from elevated
carboxyhemoglobin, which in turn can be
attributed to cigarettes. The arterial oxygen
content is adequate. VENTILATION Adequate for
the patient's level of CO2 production the
patient is neither hyper- nor hypo-ventilating. A
CID-BASE Elevated pH and HCO3- suggest a state
of metabolic alkalosis, most likely related to
the patient's diuretic his serum K should be
checked for hypokalemia.
60Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 2. A 46-year-old man has been in the
hospital two days with pneumonia. He was
recovering but has just become diaphoretic,
dyspneic, and hypotensive. He is breathing
oxygen through a nasal cannula at 3 l/min. pH
7.40 PaCO2 20 mm Hg COHb 1.0 PaO2 80 mm
Hg SaO2 95 Hb 13.3 gm HCO3- 12
mEq/L CaO2 17.2 ml O2/dl How would you
characterize his state of oxygenation,
ventilation, and acid-base balance?
61Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 2 - Discussion OXYGENATION The PaO2 is
lower than expected for someone hyperventilating
to this degree and receiving supplemental oxygen,
and points to significant V-Q imbalance. The
oxygen content is adequate. VENTILATION PaCO2
is half normal and indicates marked
hyperventilation. ACID-BASE Normal pH with
very low bicarbonate and PaCO2 indicates combined
respiratory alkalosis and metabolic acidosis. If
these changes are of sudden onset, the diagnosis
of sepsis should be strongly considered,
especially in someone with a documented infection.
62Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 3. A 58-year-old woman is being evaluated
in the emergency department for acute
dyspnea. FIO2 .21 pH 7.19 PaCO2 65
mm Hg COHb 1.1 PaO2 45 mm
Hg SaO2 90 Hb 15.1
gm HCO3- 24 mEq/L CaO2 18.3 ml O2/dl How
would you characterize her state of oxygenation,
ventilation, and acid-base balance?
63Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 3 - Discussion OXYGENATION The patient's
PaO2 is reduced for two reasons - hypercapnia and
V-Q imbalance - the latter apparent from an
elevated P(A-a)O2 (approximately 27 mm Hg).
VENTILATION The patient is hypoventilating. AC
ID-BASE pH and PaCO2 are suggestive of acute
respiratory acidosis plus metabolic acidosis the
calculated HCO3- is lower than expected from
acute respiratory acidosis alone.
64Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 4. A 23-year-old man is being evaluated in
the emergency room for severe pneumonia. His
respiratory rate is 38/min and he is using
accessory breathing muscles. FIO2 .90 Na 154
mEq/L pH 7.29 K 4.1 mEq/L PaCO2 55 mm
Hg Cl- 100 mEq/L PaO2 47 mm Hg CO2 24 mEq/L SaO2
86 HCO3- 23 mEq/L COHb 2.1 Hb 13
gm CaO2 15.8 ml O2/dl How would you
characterize his state of oxygenation,
ventilation, and acid-base balance?
65Arterial Blood Gases Test Your Overall
Understanding
Case 4 - Discussion OXYGENATION The PaO2 and
SaO2 are both markedly reduced on 90 inspired
oxygen, indicating severe ventilation-perfusion
imbalance. VENTILATION The patient is
hypoventilating despite the presence of
tachypnea, indicating significant dead-pace
ventilation. This is a dangerous situation that
suggests the need for mechanical ventilation.
ACID-BASE The low pH, high PaCO2, and slightly
low calculated HCO3- all point to combined acute
respiratory acidosis and metabolic acidosis.
Anion gap is elevated to 30 mEq/L indicating a
clinically significant anion gap (AG) acidosis,
possibly from lactic acidosis. With an of AG of
30 mEq/L, his serum CO2 should be much lower, to
reflect buffering of the increased acid.
However, his serum CO2 is near normal,
indicating a primary process that is increasing
it, i.e., a metabolic alkalosis in addition to a
metabolic acidosis. The cause of the alkalosis is
as yet undetermined. In summary this patient
has respiratory acidosis, metabolic acidosis, and
metabolic alkalosis.
66Arterial Blood Gas Interpretation
Lawrence Martin, MD, FACP, FCCP Associate
Professor of MedicineCase Western Reserve
University School of Medicine, Clevelandlarry.mar
tin_at_adelphia.net The End